Theodore's World: WWII Vet Celebrates 100th Birthday At His Favorite Restaurant

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March 19, 2008

WWII Vet Celebrates 100th Birthday At His Favorite Restaurant





Petty Office 2nd Class Lafe Denton, left and Petty Officer 2nd Class Chris Tabbert present Pearl Harbor Veteran John Persinger with a special plaque commemorating his birthday and years of service in the Navy.


Centenarian celebrates with women, wings

The Des Moines Register

John Persinger turned 100 Wednesday and did what few new centenarians do.

He celebrated at Hooters, the politically incorrect restaurant chain known for hot wings served by young women in hot pants.

Persinger is a widower, so his wife didn't mind. Truth is, Vi wouldn't have minded anyway.

"We opened the place in 1993," he says in a low, sandpaper rumble. "We went for the shrimp and chicken wings."

And they became regulars. They'd been married almost 72 years when Vi died at 89.

Persinger doesn't exactly fit the Hooters demographic, but so what? You don't hit the 100 mark by paying strict attention to convention.

A boy born in the United States today can expect to live 75 years. When Persinger came along, the life expectancy was a hair under 50.

He's different from most of the 40,000 centenarians in the United States. All but 6,000 are women.

"I don't know how I did it," he says. "Good living, I guess. A lot of good food. Steaks, fried potatoes. I sip a little Royal Crown now and then."

Don't get the wrong idea. He means Crown Royal.

Persinger lives by himself in a one-bedroom home near Merle Hay Mall. He gets plenty of help from his kids and their kids. They check in on him, give him a hand with the housework.

He does much of the cleaning and almost all of the cooking. He can be ornery when he finds a grease spot on the stove.

Persinger tells me it's hard to beat his onion rings, chili, pancakes, meatballs and, of course, his famous fried mush.

"Fry till it gets brown," he says, "add syrup and butter. Oh, it's really good."

I'll wait for meatball day. At 120 pounds, Persinger doesn't weigh much more than a plate of meatballs.

He was sturdier in his prime, during World War II when he watched a Japanese kamikaze pilot carry out a suicide mission.

"I was the oldest sailor on the USS Nashville," he says. "They called me 'Pops.' "

On Dec. 13, 1944, the ship was a few miles from the Philippines when a single-engine fighter came crashing down, two bombs strapped to the wings.

The plane hit, the bombs exploded. Flames and bodies were everywhere.

"He came right over the trees and hit us behind the stacks," says Persinger, who escaped injury. "Killed 133 sailors and wounded 197. But he didn't sink us."

Persinger came home, but he wasn't finished. Korea was next. Somehow he and Vi raised three children, who gave him eight grandkids, who were followed by 14 great-grandkids.

Every Christmas Eve, without fail, the entire family squeezes into the little house on 59th Street. After 38 years in a row, it's a tight squeeze.

A person can jam a lot of living into one century. Persinger survived the Depression, lived on the farm and in the city and not always in "Ioway."

He built dams, milked cows, worked in a munitions plant and a rock quarry.

He adopted a black bear cub in Alaska, flew Cessnas after the GI bill covered his lessons.

He learned to drive a car when he was 6 and was cruising over to Hooters at 98. He doesn't get behind the wheel anymore.

"The doctor said I shouldn't be driving," he says. "I could drive OK. I never had a wreck, but I didn't say anything."

Never had a wreck, never had major surgery.

When Persinger retired from his job as a diesel mechanic in Rock Island, he went to work part time at Continental Western, fixing and maintaining lawn equipment. He did that until he was 88.

Persinger still plays the harmonica. When it's somebody else's birthday, he picks up the phone and knocks out "Happy Birthday" or "Roll Out the Barrel."
He's into politics. "Oh, God," he says. "George Bush ruined the country."

The birthday celebration began Sunday with a party at Meredith Drive Reformed Church. Seventy-five, maybe 100 friends showed up.

"I saw the 100-year-old man," one little boy said. "He's real."

On Wednesday, another 40 or so gathered at Hooters, where a sign above the bar wished Persinger a happy 100th.

A group from the Navy Operational Support Center gave him a plaque.

Persinger sat in a chair, nibbled on some wings, sipped a beer and accepted hugs and handshakes.

Not everybody thinks Hooters was such a perfect party location. Some, apparently, would have preferred Chuck E. Cheese's.

"One guy at the church said, 'Didn't you hear the message this morning about looking at girls and everything?' I told him I was going to Hooters to eat chicken wings."

It's the truth, but maybe not the whole truth. Persinger has been known to ask the women if they'd like a 100-year-old kiss.

Talking about it, the 100-year-old man lets out a 100-year-old laugh, which seems like a decent consolation prize.


Wild Thing's comment.......

He seems to have a good sense of humor too and is having a great time. He hates Bush LOL.



...Thank you Jim for the article.

Posted by Wild Thing at March 19, 2008 02:47 AM


Comments

He's simply adorable!
Iowans are like that--say what they mean and mean what they say. I know, I married an Iowa boy.
Sometimes it's painfully honest, but other times it's just plain funny and you have to laugh at it.

Posted by: Lynn at March 19, 2008 08:04 AM


You go, grandpa! He's there for the wings....riiiiight.

Posted by: PeteSuj at March 19, 2008 11:58 AM


Maybe Hooters will add his fried mush to their menu. Mr Persinger seems to have lived the perfect life. One of the Greatest Generation.

Posted by: TomR at March 19, 2008 12:08 PM


He is there for the Wings and the Hooters, what else is there.

Posted by: Mark at March 19, 2008 03:07 PM


Lynn, yes I got a kick out of his strong love of life and enjoying each day.

Posted by: Wild Thing at March 19, 2008 11:41 PM


PeteSuj, LMAO exactly. hahaha

Posted by: Wild Thing at March 19, 2008 11:42 PM


Tom giggle that would be neat if Hooters did do that.

Posted by: Wild Thing at March 19, 2008 11:43 PM


Mark that's right and he is loving it.

Posted by: Wild Thing at March 19, 2008 11:44 PM